North Korea is an intriguing place when it comes to technology - we get the odd glimpse through a GoPro, their bizarre Netflix equivalent or a Facebook clone, but never really the full picture.

That is, until now, proving that nothing stays private from the long and unforgiving reach of the internet for too long.

A Reddit thread, linking to a GitHub data dump, shows off what is apparently a list of websites registered to North Korea's official domain, '.kp'. Beforehand, little to nothing was known about the secretive country's web service.

After the apparent leak, though, we now know about ALL of them - well, all 28, that is.

The wrong turn, according to the GitHub post, occurred when North Korea accidentally opened up a server that held the domain name information. A move we imagine supremo Kim Jong-un didn't simply shrug his shoulders at.

So what do North Koreans have on offer when they look online?

Well, we assume everyone's hitting up the Friend social network.

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Bear Grylls//Digital Spy

How about taking a tour of the country?

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Bear Grylls//Digital Spy

Naturally, you can catch up on the 'news', which appears to be just a Kim Jong-un tracker.

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Bear Grylls//Digital Spy

Oh, and here's the domain for if you want to get the hell out of North Korea, it seems.

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Bear Grylls//Digital Spy

Other websites do exist, though they either look very similar to the ones above or are now blocked from access. It's also important to point out that while these domains appear official, this kind of thing can be tricky to verify.

If this is indeed all the country is harboring, though, somebody needs to get GIFs involved.

From: Digital Spy